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![Page 1: Ann Berrington, University of Southampton Acknowledgements to Juliet Stone, Peter Tammes & Steve Roberts Young Adults, Economic Precariousness and Housing.](https://reader035.fdocuments.us/reader035/viewer/2022062516/56649e3a5503460f94b2b942/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
Ann Berrington, University of Southampton
Acknowledgements to Juliet Stone, Peter Tammes & Steve Roberts
Young Adults, Economic Precariousness and Housing
The Crisis for Contemporary Youth: Opportunities and Civic Values in Comparative, Longitudinal and Inter-generational Perspective. 4-5th June 2015, London.
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Overview
1. Changing socio-economic and policy context
2. With whom do young adults live?
3. What is the impact of economic precariousness on transition out of parental home?
4. Discussion
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1. Changing socio-economic and policy context
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Increased Economic Precariousness
• Increased enrolment in HE.– Increased student
debt.
• Increased youth unemployment and economic insecurity for those in work.– Part time,
temporary & short hours contracts.
4
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– Increased house prices, lack of mortgage credit.– Increased rental prices, deposits.
Source: Shelter (2015)
Declining affordability of private housing
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First time buyers now older, middle earners squeezed out
Source: Shelter (2015)
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1920 1924
1928 1932
1936 1940
1944 1948
1952 1956
1960 1964
1968 1972
1976 1980
1984 1988
1992 1996
2000 2004
2008 2012
-
50,000
100,000
150,000
200,000
250,000
300,000
350,000
400,000
450,000
New house building in UK each year 1920 to 2013 (Northern Ireland included only from 1948) Total
PrivateSector
Public Sector & Housing Associa-tion
Annual average growth in number of households (source: DCLG Live Table 401)
Sources: From 1946: DCLG live tables. Earlier: Scottish Housing, and AE Holmans 2005
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Increased reliance on private rental sector
20-24 25-29 30-34 35-39 40-44 45-49 50-54 55-69 70+0%
10%20%30%40%50%60%70%80%90%
100%
Percentage private renting by age of Household Reference Person UK, 2001 and 2014
2001 2014
Age of household reference person
Source: Labour Force Survey
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Welfare retrenchment
– Residualisation of social housing sector– Restrictions in housing benefit/Local
Housing Allowance (LHA) • Shared Accommodation Rate under 35 single
young adults• Reductions in value of LHA• Overall benefit cap, soon to be reduced further
9
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2. With whom do young adults live?
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% living with a parent, UK, 2001, 2011 and 2014
Source: ONS, from LFS
Female
Male
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Household Type by Economic Activity Status. Women aged 25-29, UK 2009/10
econ active econ inactiveunemployed FT student family care0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
100%
sharing with othersliving alonelone parentwith partnerwith parents
% in
eac
h liv
ing
arra
ngem
ent
employed
Source: Understanding Society
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Tenure distribution of young women living outside parental home according to age and household type, UK 2012.
With partner
Lone parent
Alone
Sharing
With partner
Lone parent
Alone
Sharing
With partner
Lone parent
Alone
Sharing
20-24 25-29 30-34WOMEN
0%10%20%30%40%50%60%70%80%90%
100%
Owner Occupier Private Rent Social Rent
Source: UK LFS. Berrington & Stone (2014)
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Percentage of young adults who are single and living outside the family home in shared accommodation, UK 2012 and 2014
20-21 22-24 25-29 30-34 20-21 22-24 25-29 30-34Women Men
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
20122014
Source: Labour Force Survey
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Concealed Families on the Rise Again, Especially in London
Percentage of families that are concealed according to age of head of family unit and family unit type, Eng & Wales, 2011
Source: 2011 Census
Lone
par
ent f
amili
es
Coup
le fa
mili
es
All f
amili
es
Lone
par
ent f
amili
es
Coup
le fa
mili
es
All f
amili
es
24 and under 25-34
0
4
8
12
16
Series1 Series2
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3. What is the impact of economic precariousness on chances of leaving parental home?
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Measuring economic precariousness
UK 25-29 year-olds, 2009/10 % of total who are
unemployed employed semi-/ routine
employed part-time
employed temporary
Men 13 18 6 7
Women 8 16 26 8
Source: Berrington A. et al. (2014) Economic Precariousness and Young Adults’ Living Arrangements., ESRC Centre for Population Change Working Paper.
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Analytical Framework – analyses leaving home
Parental characteristics• Parental household
income• Maternal education• Parental family
structure
Young adult’s characteristics• Economic activity /
precariousness• Highest educational
qualification• Ethnicity• Region residence
Probability of transition out of parental home
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Modelling Transition Out of Parental Home
• Analysis of paired waves of Understanding Society (UKHLS) data waves 1-3
• Sample: men and women aged 16-29 living at home at t0• Logistic hazards model of leaving home between t0 and t1• Parental background and individual level explanatory
variables
• I will show findings for employed young men Secure (i.e. permanent full time work) vs Insecure work (i.e. part time or temporary work)
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Highest
quartile of H
H inco
me
2nd highest
quartile HH in
come
3rd high
est quarti
le HH inco
me
Lowest
quartile HH in
come
0.00
0.04
0.08
0.12
Permanent full time job Insecure job
Predicted annual probabilities of leaving parental home by job security and parental household income. UK employed males, 16-22, 2009-2013.
Other variables held at reference category: white, higher educated, living in London, high maternal education, living with two natural parents
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Two natural parents Two - other parents Lone parent0.00
0.05
0.10
0.15
0.20
0.25
Permanent full time job Insecure job
Predicted annual probabilities of leaving parental home by job security and parental family structure. UK employed males, 16-22, 2009-2013.
Other variables held at reference category: white, higher educated, living in London, high maternal education, highest quartile of HH income
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White Indian Pakistani & Bangladeshi
Other and mixed0.00
0.05
0.10
0.15
0.20
0.25
0.30
Full time permanent job Insecure job
Predicted annual probabilities of leaving parental home by job security and ethnicity. UK employed males, 23-29, 2009-2013.
Other variables held at reference category: higher educated, living in London, high maternal education, highest quartile of HH income, living with two natural parents
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4. Discussion
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Young Adults Priced Out of Owning a Home• Private rented sector dominant role in housing pathways for
older / wider sector of population.• House price to income ratios rapidly increasing from 2001
onwards.• Mortgage interest low but large deposits required (Help to
Buy ~ 100,000 homes).• Inter- and intra-generational inequality in housing
pathways. • Need to increase availability of stable, good quality rented
accommodation for increasing numbers of young families.• Regulation of PRS – new life course phases.• “The Government must build more of the right homes at the
right prices in the right areas”’ David Orr (National Housing Federation)
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Transition to Residential Independence
• Are these trends result of short term crisis or part of a longer term change in nature of housing transitions?
• Early home leaving seen both among advantaged young adults (e.g. to attend HE), and among disadvantaged (e.g. more likely to leave to search for a job, family friction).
• Select group who remain in parental home in late twenties and early thirties tends to be socio-economically disadvantaged
• Returning home esp. after HE, partnership dissolution (Stone et al., 2014)
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Policy Implications • Lack of ability of some vulnerable groups to return home.• Queen’s Speech => 18-21 yr olds => homelessness• Need supported pathways for early, non-student leavers.• Importance of policy to recognise gender and ethnic
differences in housing pathways.• Implications of changes to level of LHA, e.g. benefit claimants
priced out of London• Slight increase in sharing - At what age should we expect young
people to live in shared housing?• Current housing policy supports main carer of dependent
children but ignores non-resident parent.
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References
Berrington, A. and Stone, J. (2014) Young adults’ transitions to residential independence in Britain: The role of social and housing policy. In Hamilton, M., Antonucci, L. & Roberts, S. (Eds.) Young People and Social Policy in Europe. Palgrave Macmillan.Berrington, A. et al. (2014) Economic Precariousness and Young Adults’ Living Arrangements., ESRC Centre for Population Change Working Paper. http://www.cpc.ac.uk/publications/cpc_working_papers.phpShelter (2015) Housing Affordability for First Time Buyers, March 2015.Stone,J.,et al. (2011) Demographic Research, 25(20):629-66. The changing determinants of UK young adults' living arrangements. http://www.demographic-research.org/volumes/vol25/20/25-20.pdfStone, J. et al. (2014) Gender, turning-points and boomerangs: returning home in the UK. Demography, 51, (1), 257-276.
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Acknowledgements
This research is funded by ESRC Grant numbers RES-625-28-0001 and ES/K003453/1. The Centre for Population Change is a joint initiative between the University of Southampton and a consortium of Scottish Universities in partnership with ONS and NRS. The findings, interpretations, and conclusions expressed in this paper are entirely those of the authors and should not be attributed in any manner to ONS or NRS.
Understanding Society is carried out by the Institute for Social and Economic Research at the University of Essex. The UK Labour Force Survey is carried out by the Office for National Statistics. Access to these data is provided by the UK Data Archive. The original data creators, depositors or copyright holders, the funders of the Data Collections (if different) and the UK Data Archive bear no responsibility for their further analysis or interpretation.
28
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• SPARE SLIDES
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Unemployment rate 1992-2013 according to graduate status, UK
Q2 1992
Q2 1993
Q21994
Q2 1995
Q2 1996
Q2 1997
Q2 1998
Q2 1999
Q2 2000
Q2 2001
Q2 2002
Q2 2003
Q2 2004
Q2 2005
Q2 2006
Q2 2007
Q2 2008
Q2 2009
Q2 2010
Q2 2011
Q2 2012
Q2 20130
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
16Recent graduates Non recent graduatesNon graduates aged 21-30 Non graduates aged over 30
Une
mpl
oym
ent R
ate
Source: ONS, 2014
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Household Type by Economic Activity Status. Men aged 25-29. UK 2009/10
econ ac
tive
econ in
active
unemployed
FT st
udent0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
100%
sharing with othersliving alonelone parentwith partnerwith parents
% in
eac
h liv
ing
arra
ngem
ent
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Reported parental family type at age 14, UK men and women aged 16-24 in 2009-10 by ethnic group.
WhiteMixed
BlackIndian
Pakistan
Bangladesh
Other
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
100%
Two biological parentsMother and step fatherFather and step motherLone motherLone fatherOther
Ethnic group
Perc
enta
ge (w
eigh
ted)
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Large cross-national variations in co-residence among young adults
33
% males aged 25-34 living with a parent in 2012 and 25-29 male unemployment rate in 2012
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Dimensions Types Indicators1-Precarious labour market
A-labour insecurity
i-(Un)employed
ii-Occupational class & mobility
B-income insecurity i-Earnings, wages2-Precarious employment relations
A-Employment insecurity
i-Part-time contractii-Temporary contractiii-Other: seasonal, shifts
B-Skill reproduction insecurity
i-Training & development
C-Work insecurity i-Protection against accidents, illness, inferior treatment
3-Precarious social and political relations
A-Representation insecurity i-Trade union representation
ii-Right to strikeB-Social insecurity
i-Social benefits & social policies
ii-Role of partner, parents or other relatives
Table 1: Dimensions and indicators of economic precarity (See CPC Working paper #55 / Briefing paper # 22)
Adapted from Kalleberg (2009), Standing (2011), and Wilson and Ebert (2013).
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Employment insecurity: % part-time according to gender, age and occupational class (See BP #22)
Managerial/professional Intermediate/lower supervisory/technical
Semi-routine/routine
Managerial/professional Intermediate/lower supervisory/technical
Semi-routine/routine
Managerial/professional Intermediate/lower supervisory/technical
Semi-routine/routine
Managerial/professional Intermediate/lower supervisory/technical
Semi-routine/routine
18-2
425
-34
18-2
425
-34
men
wom
en
0 10 20 30 40 50 60
Source: UKHLS 2009/10
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5. Reported ideal age for leaving home by gender and ethnicity, UK 2011/12.
Ethnicity Males Females
Mean# (se) % non-num.
Mean# (se) % non-num.
White 21.3 (0.1) 12.1 21.1 (0.1) 7.6
Indian 23.1 (0.5) 15.0 22.8 (0.4) 16.9
Pakistani & Bangladeshi
23.5 (0.4) 24.5 23.3 (0.4) 18.1
Black 22.5 (0.4) 12.8 21.5 (0.3) 12.0
Other & mixed 21.5 (0.4) 11.1 21.6 (0.3) 10.1
Source: UKHLS wave 3, 16-21 year olds living at home.
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There was already an increase in proportions remaining in parental home prior to recession
37
Employed FT, perm
Other employed
Unemployed Student Inactive0%5%
10%15%20%25%30%35%40%45%
1998 2008
Economic Activity
Perc
enta
ge (w
eigh
ted)
% males aged 25-34 living with parents, 1998 and 2008, by economic activity, UK.
Source: UK LFS. Stone et al. (2011) The changing determinants of UK young adults' living arrangements. Demographic Research 25(20):629-66.
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Household Type by Economic Activity Status. Men aged 25-29. UK 2009/10
econ ac
tive
econ in
active
unemployed
FT st
udent0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
100%
sharing with othersliving alonelone parentwith partnerwith parents
% in
eac
h liv
ing
arra
ngem
ent
employed
Source: UKHLS, w 1
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Two sets of models for employed men: 1) those aged 16-22 at t02) those aged 23-29 at t0
Model 1 Job insecurityModel 2 Model 1 + respondent’s level of education,
ethnicity, region residenceModel 3 Model 2 + maternal education, parental
household equivalised income, parental family structure
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Results for employed men: Odds ratios for leaving home, 2009-2012Aged 16-22 Model 1
Job insecurity
Model 2+ indv. char.
Model 3+ parental char.
Job security (ref. = permanently employed)
1 1 1
Insecure job 0.859 0.902 0.887
Aged 23-29 Model 1Job insecurity
Model 2+ indv. char.
Model 3+ parental char.
Job security (ref. = permanently employed)
1 1 1
Insecure job 0.499*** 0.520** 0.515*
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5. Young non resident fathers
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Young Non-resident Fathers• UK distinctive in high proportion of children not living with
both natural parents.
• Rules for social housing entitlement & housing benefit assume one parent has primary care of child.
• But shared parenting takes place and is encouraged.
• Non-resident parent will be classed as not having children and hence not qualify for e.g. access to social housing, will be affected by SAR & ‘bedroom tax’.
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How many young men are reported to be non-resident with at least one of their children?
Age groupNon-resident fathers
% of all men % of fathers
20-24 3.1% 37.2%
25-29 7.7% 26.3%
30-34 9.5% 19.5%
Total (20-34) 5.4% 24.2%
Reported prevalence of non-resident fathers in the UK by age group, UKHLS, 2009-2010
Source: UK LFS. Berrington & Stone (2014) Young adults’ transitions to residential independence in Britain: The role of social and housing policy. In Hamilton, Antonucci & Roberts (Eds.) Young People and Social Policy in Europe. Palgrave Macmillan.
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With whom are young non-resident fathers living?
20-24 25-29 30-340%
20%
40%
60%
80%
100%
With parents With partner Living alone Sharing
Age group
Perc
enta
ge (w
eigh
ted)
Distribution of living arrangements among UK non-resident fathers by age group, 2009-2010. UKHLS.
Source: UK LFS. Berrington & Stone (2014) Young adults’ transitions to residential independence in Britain: The role of social and housing policy. In Hamilton, Antonucci & Roberts (Eds.) Young People and Social Policy in Europe. Palgrave Macmillan.